Jump to content
This Site Uses Cookies. If You Want to Disable Cookies, Please See Your Browser Documentation. ×

DancingPixie

Member
  • Posts

    19
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by DancingPixie

  1. When you finish watching the Nutcracker you feel happy, therefore you like the music.  When you finish watching Giselle you are emotionally drained and sad at the same time.  This will cause you to grow a not so fond feeling of the music.

    Therefore I feel that the impression of the music is affected by the mood of the ballet at which it is performed to.

    I sort of agree - in that the impression ballet music leaves on you definitely is affected by the mood of the ballet itself. But though swan lake - for example, isn't 'happy', I still love the music. I think that Giselle is a bit of a let down musically - not terrible, but just 'nice' as opposed to wonderful :P

  2. ^ I respectfully beg to differ. I know many dancers myself who aren't caucasian and who have the same body type as the best ballet dancers.

    Sadly, there really are far too few dancers of African and Asian descent in professional ballet. I do think, however, that the situation is changing - albeit too slowly for my liking - but it is changing. I really hope that dancers of diverse backgrounds will soon be represented throughout the ballet world :)

  3. This is a bit of an aside, but I was in Romania last year and the ballet in Bucharest was lovely. But the tickets were so cheap that I kept wondering how much do dancers in less economically powerful countries earn? I'm guessing the pay in Russia would be good, but what about elsewhere in eastern europe for example?

  4. this thread is such a pleasure to read, and I'm mostly embarassed by my contribution - because it isn't half as good as some of the rest - but I've always thought that the first movement of Beethoven's 6th symphony would be so perfect for the opening of a ballet. To me, it sounds like day break on a beautiful morning - (yes, I realize that sounds a bit melodramatic :) lol) every time I hear it I imagine the lights slowly lighting up the stage and a ballet beginning :huh:

  5. Here are the ones you mentioned plus a few more, from oldest to newest (source: the Oxford Dictionary of Dance) :)

    1. La Sylphide premiered 12 March 1832 at the Paris Opera

    2. Giselle premiered 28 June 1841 at the Paris Opera

    3. Pas de Quatre premiered 12 July 1845 in London

    4. Don Quixote premiered at Moscow's Bolshoi Theatre on 26 December 1869

    5. Coppélia premiered 25 May 1870 at the Paris Opera

    6. Swan Lake premiered 4 March 1877 at the Bolshoi Theatre, Russia

    7. Sleeping Beauty premiered in 1890 at the Maryinsky Theatre, St Petersburg

    8. The Nutcracker premiered 18 December 1892 at the Maryinsky Theatre in St Petersburg

    9. Seranade premiered 10 June 1934 by students of the School of American Ballet

    10. Romeo & Juliet premiered 30 December 1938 at Brno, Czechoslovakia

    11. Carmen premiered 21 February 1949 by the Ballet de Paris performing in London

    12. A Midsummer's Night Dream premiered 17 Jan. 1962 by New York City Ballet in NYC

×
×
  • Create New...